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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1896-09-11, Page 2rtge ii 2 SEAFORTH CARRIAGE WORKS. The best Buggies and Wagons My stook of Carriave is very complete ; all band made, under ou • ow.. trpervitien. Don't bus foreign factory -made buta.i t when you can get better made a3 home, and as cheap, it not cheaper thee the work brought in froh.r outset.) towes, Why spend money money in building up rival towns and injure your own, when you can do better ab home. Call and eeo nie and be convinced. Ail kinds of blacksmith ng and repairing promptly and satisfactorily done. A fall stook of Cutters of the best material and latest styles, which will be sold cheap. Lewis McDonald, SEAS ORTH. 1430 CASEY & CO. •ARE, PREPARED TO SELL TURNIP ANDwikesfts MANGOU.D B- ;- the S As Chea as any in the trade And will not be- undersold. Befo buying giv' us a call. Dur g ugust w DI 2 E 5 lbs. of a g pd Green T a, for 50c., cash. This is not a a dust,. Skme good Slap yet. Will give 7 ' ve cent bars for 25e ; 12 three cent bars for 25e. In Canned Goods We kee 1 nothing but best 'brands: We have y =t some pure Maple Syrup at 25c a quart. OA EY & CO., SEAFORTH. FACT READ SURE The Tobacco Habit Cured BY= UNCLE • APil S Tobacco Cure.. Read the Strongest Endorsement ever given any Remedy The United States health reports have examined and investigated many prepara- tions, and in the light of our examination and tests of UNCLE SAM'S TOBACCO CURE we are but performing a duty to the Public when we endorse the same and stamp it as the crowning achievement of the Nineteenth Century in the way of destroy- ing a habit as disgusting as it is common, far only $1. Hence weearnestly advise you to write them for full particulars." FOR SALE BY V. FEAR, Druggist. 1477.30 PF'E • I carry the largest stook of new designs and finest goods at the lowest prices of any house in the county. *IeFr good sold as cheap as any old stock or out of date goods. Why I can do so is beoausegoods bought now are bought from 1 to 10 cents: per roll lent than they were when old stook fres. My expenses are low. I have a 1)'"g stook and need the money. Wall paper from 31 cents per roll. up. Window shades, Mould - Inge, Cornice polls, &o. &e., as cheap as , any in the Inde. City Wall Paper_ house, Main. St. Seaforth, apposite John, St, m JAS. GRAVES, Practical Paper Hanger and Painter. I have secured the servioes of three first-class paper hangers and can do work at the shortest notice. All work guaranteed unsurpassed. For proof .of the .hove call and see for yourself. Wall paper trimmed free. J. C. Smit co., RS- A General I3auking bu iness transacted.. Ferulers' notes discount & Drafts bought and sold . Interest allowed on de osits, at the rate of 5 per cent.. per annum.. SALE NOTES diseou-lr eel,: or taken for collection. OFFICE --First door Wilson's Hardware Store.. SEAFOR orth of Reid & H. , THE FAR .EFS' Banking House, SEA rc - T11:1 - (In - (In connection with the Bs k of Montreal.) • LOGAN & l CO.; BANKERS AND FINAIN CIAL AGENTS. OFFICE—In the Commercial Hotel build- ing, next to the Town 'Hall. A General Banking Busidhse done. . Drafts issued and cashed. Interest allowed .on deposits. MONEY TO LEND On good notes or mortgages,` ROBERT LOGAN, MANAGER. 1058 CRIH Stearn Boiler Works, (ESTABLISHED 1880.) A. CI -111,171S II A L, Successor to Chrystal. & Bla k, Manufacturers of all kn¢la of Stationary Marius,. Upright & Tubular BO1LEJtS Salt Pans, Smoke Stacks, Sheet Xroc Werke, etc.,. eto. Also dealore in. Upr1" ht and Horizontal Slide Valve twines. Autornstxc Cr.t.'tft Engines a erociaity All lees of pipe and pip,, -fatting constantly on hand 7Estteastes furnitthe4t on short notion. Works—Oppoelte e. F. Ii. Station, Giederlch, THE HURON EXPOSITOR, REAL ESTATE FOR SALE. FOR SALE OR TO RENT.—The house lately oc- cupied, by Wm. Carnooban, East of St. James' Church, Seeforth. Apply to F. HOLMESTED. 1453 tf T ARMS QR SALE.—The undersigned has twenty i Chole: Farms tor sale in East Huron, the ban- ner County of the Province ; all sizes, and prices td' suit. For f 11 information, write or pall personally. No troub:e o show them. F. 8. 8COrT, 'Brussels p O: 1591•tt ARI T B. SALE —100 acres, in thetownship of Grey, near Br noels. There is on it nearly 50 acres of bu b, about half black :ash, the rest hard- wood. A ever -failing spring of water runs through the lob. 1 ill bo Sold -at a big bargain. For partieu- lare, apply to M18. JANE WALKER, Box 219, Brussels. I 1470 FRM AFr R SALT. -For sale, lot {20, Huron road. Turk, rsmitb, oontaining 100 acres, all eared except 10 1 Cres of good bush. There is a good frame house and •ood frame barn, and other outbui dings. The farm i an excellent one ; it is well underd ained and well fenced, and .there is plenty of good ater. It is two m les and a halt from Seatorth. This •desir- able prope ty will be sold cheap and on easy arms. Porseeslon given ,.otober let. For further part milers apply to V4ILLIAM,FOWLER, Huron rood; .r -Sea- forth P. 0. 14 0-13 OPLEND D FARM FOR SALE.—Lot 10, •oncas- p Sion township of Stanley, c0ntalnit g 100 acres. Th s Is one of the best farms in the to nship and is situ ted in a.good and pleasant nelghbo hood. Soil of the best and not a rod of waste land on it. _ There are all the buildings on itthat are re vired. The whole farm has been newpy fenced and .drained. An oroha d of -70 bearing trees, plenty of gold water, con eniont to schools, churches, post office and markt. Apply to WM. SINOL AIR, Varna P. 0., or to A M. COPP, Seatort . 1491-tt 1i(AR3f •L 1st, About 90 vation. ed. Ther stone stab good wate is one of t sold thea! Apply on (London r� OR SALE.—For s . R. S., 7'aekersmi ores cleared and in he farm is all well f is a: brick house a ing. Ateo a good . It is within fou e best farms in t as the prqprietor i he premises or add ad), Bruoefield P. le, lot 30, concession b, containing 100 acres. a high state of culti-` need and under -drain - d large bank barn with ro and and plenty of miles of Clinton. It o county and will be desirous. of retiring. ess JOAN MaKENZIE, 1457-tt ARM ) OR SAKE. For . ale' a forty-two acre farm, adjoining tho~Villsge of Wroxeter (part of it within the corporation). his farm, east; halt of Lot 25, n the " C " Concession of the township oN Turnberrj, is nicely situated dn-- he river Maitland., and on th leading road from Wr xeter to W'ngham. rammed is a good young orchard o ramed to bear, a good br ck dwelling and frame aro on the prem- ises ; also a never -tailing spring rising near the dwel- ling, and unning through the milk house ; title per: feet. As the proprietor is dead, the Executrix will Bell "on v ry easy terms. For further particulars, appy to J. COWAN, Wroxete P. 0., or on the premises o MRS. W. BARRON, Executrix. 1495tf OMEN ID FARM FOR SAL .—Lo6 25, Concee- Sion 6, Township of Morris, containing 150 acres suitable foe grain or stock -situated two and a half. miles from the thriving village of Brussels, a good gravel road leading thereto • 120 acres clearand tree from stumps, 6 acres cedar and ash -and b'tlance hardwood,. Barn 61x60 with straw and hay shed 40x70, stgne stabling underneath botb...Tbe house is brick, 22x32 with kitchen 18x26, cellar 'underneath both buildings. All are new. There lea large young orchard. School on next lot. The land has a good natural drainage, and the farm is in good condition, Satisfactory reasons for Selling.. Apply at Tau Ex- POSITOR Orrr>ies, or on the premiaes. WM. BARRIE, Brussels. 1385-tf FARM con acres, ab state of e good bar and barn at the ho Itis wit five mile with goo This is a IN GREY FOR SALE.—For sale lot 12, ession 14, township of Grey, containing 100 ut 85 of which'are cleared, is in a good Itivation and Well fenced. The balance - is wood bush. There is a good frame house and good bearing orchard. There is a well se and a never failing spring on the farm. in two miles of the village of Cranbrook, froM Brussels and the same from Walton, . gravel roads leading in all directions. eplendid farm and will be sold at a bargain pride'. is anxious to retire. NEIL DUN- Cranbrook I'. 0. 1486-tf • HOUS ASH LOT FO,R SALE.—For sale, cheap, th house and lot in Harpurhey, on the Rox- boro roa , adjAning the property of Mr. F. Holmes- sted. T ere is a quarter acre of land well planted with bea ng fruit trees. Also a good etable. Tue house ntains 5 rooms, woodshed, stone cellar, hard and soft water and all other conveniences It is very p easantly eituated and is an admirable Owe for a reti ed farmer. Six scree of land also adjoin- ing this eoperty wi'l be sold with it or separately. 'Apply to D. G,RUMMEI7, Harpurhey. FAR2M FOR SALX—For gale, lot 36, concession inloss, conteining 100 acres, 84 cleared and the bale ce is good hardwood bush. The land is in a well fen There is a frame barn and log house on the prop rty, a never -failing spring wirh windmill, also Edam t 2 acres of orchard. It is an excellent farm an is within one niile of Whitechurch ,stittion, where here are stores, blackemith shop and churche . There is a school on the opposite lot. It is eix mi es from Winghain and six from Luckniow, with go d roads leading in all directions. This de- sirable roperty will be sold on reasonable terms. For furt et prrticulars apply to JAMES MITCHELL,---. THE BREAD CRUSADE DR, TALMAGE PREACHES UPON A SEASONABLE SUBJECT. A. Journey Front Canaan' to Egypt to Get Point Which Discomfits Many a Sin Starved Soul. _ WASHINGTON, Sept. 6.—NO one not born and brought up in the country- could preach a sermon like this .of Pr. Talmage. It is a pastoral and full of scenes from country life. The text is Getiesis 3: Aseid Judah spake unto him saying, The man did solemnly .protost unto us, saying, Yo shall not see _iny face, exeopt your brother be with you. • Nothing to eat! Plenty of corn in Egypt, but ghastly famine in Ca,naan. The cat- tle moaning in the stall. Mon,. women and childreh awfully white with hunger. Not the failing of. ono crop for one sum- mer, but the failing of all the crops for seven years. A nation dying for lack of that Which is so common on your table _aid' so little appreciatek the product of haevest field and gristnfill and oven; the price of sweat and anxiety and struggle— bread! Jacob, the father, has the last re- port from thefiout bin, and he finds that everything is out, and. hts says to his sons, "Boys, hook up the wago.ns on.d start for Egypt and get us somet ing to eat." WO fact was there was a t -corncrib in Egypt.• The people of Egypt have been largely taxed in all s, at the present tine° paying between 70 and 80 per cent of their produets to the government. No wonder in that time the had a largo corn- crib, and it was full. To that crib they came from the regions und about—those who were famished—S01 e paying for the cp el in money. When e money was ex- ha,isted, paying.for the porn in sheep and cattle and horses and camels, and when they were exhausted, then selling their own bodies and their fathilies into kitiV017 The Start For Bread. The mornirg for Startang out on the crusade for. broad has arrived, Jacob gets elder 510118 start they say something that his family up very early. • But before th makes him- tremble with emotion froni head to foot and burst into tears. The fae , was that thee() elder sons had once .befor been in Egypt to get corn, and they ha been treated -somewhat roughly, the ierd of the 'corncrib supplying them with cori4 but saying at the close of the interview "Now, you need not come back here -for anymore corn unless you bring something better than moneee-hoven your ',onager brother Benjamin." Ah, Benjamin—that very name was suggestive of all tend r - nags. The mother had died at the birth of that sena spirit coming and anotl er spirit going—and the verY thought of pa ing with I3enjamin must have been a heartbreak. The keeper of this corner b, nevertheless, says to those older so s, "There is no need of your -coming up h re any more for corn uplees yon can bri g Benjamin, your father's darling."- N Jacob and. his family very much nee ed bread,- but what- a struggle it would be to ,give up his son. The orientals are v ry demonstrative in their grief, and I h ar the ciutwailing of the father as these ol er ' sons keep roitero,ting iu his ears the n- nountenient of the Egyptian lord, " e shall pot see mY face unless- your brot er be with you." "Why did you tell him y u had as brother?" says the.old man, co n- plaining and chiding them. "Why, ther,"' they said, "ho asked -us all all ut our • family, and we had no idea that he wo.uld make any such demand upon us as said the father. "I cannot, I will not, g V() -up Benjamin."' The fact was that the ld Man' had lostchildren and when there 1 as been bereavement in a household and a child taken it Makes the other children in - the household more precious. So the day for departure wee adjourned and ad- journed and adjoureed. Still the horrore of the famine increased, and louder moaned the cattle and wider open cracked. the earth and more pallid, became the cheeks, until Jacob, in ilnspair, cried out to hia sons, "Take Bee'jamin and be off 1" The' older Sons tried o eheer up their father. They- said: " W t. have strong arms and a stout heart, nd no harm will coMe to Benjamin. W '11 see that 'he' gets- back again." "Far well!" said the yoring mento, the father, i a tone of assumed good cheer. - "F -a -r -e -N e-1-1 I" said the old man. For that word h s more quavers in it when pronounced -by t aged. • than bY the young. The Reception. We 1, the bread party, tho bread mlaas- sy, drives up in front of the corn Tib of.. Egypt. • Those corncribs aro fille with wheat and barley and corn in .th husk, for modern travelere in these lands, .both in Canaan' and in Egypt, tell us here is maize. Huzzah The jommey itrende 1. The lord Of the corncrib, who is also th prime Minister, comes. down to these ne vly ar- rived travelers and says: "Dine w th ma today. How is your fathet? Is this Ben- jamin, the younger brother whese pres- ence I demanded?". The travelers are in- troduced into the „palace. They are worn and bedusted of 'the -way, and. • servants Pomo evith a basin.of water in ono hand and a towel in the other and . kneel down , before these newly arrived travelers,. wash- ing off the dust of the way. The butchers and poulterers and caterers of the -prime minister prepare 'the repast. The guests are seated in small grpups, two or three a,li a table, the food on a tray. All the luxu- rieafrom imperial gardens and orchards and aquariums and aviaries are brought there and are filling chalice and platter. Now is the time for this prime minister, If he hag a grudge against Benjamin, to show it. Will he kill him now that he has hiur in his hands? Oh, DO 1 This lord of tiro corncrib is seated at his own table, and he looks over to the tables' of his guests, and ho sends a portion to each ef them, but sonds-a larger portion to Beuja- min; or, as the Bible quaintly puts it, ``Benjamin's mess was five times as much as any of theirs." Bo quick and send word .back with the swiftest camel to Canaan to old Jacob that "Beujamin is well; all is Well; ho is faaing smnptuously; the Egyp- tian lord did not mean murder and death. but be meant deliverance and life wheale announced to us on that day,'` Ye shall not see my face unlees your brother. be with Well, my friends, this world is fartints stauck of stn. It does .not yield a si glo orop of solid satisfaction. It is dying., It is hunger bitten. The fact that it does not cannot, feed a man's heart•Was illustrated'in the life of the English com- edian. All the -world honored him—clic-6e everything for him that theavorld do. He was applanded ireEngland and Me's the United Sta,tess He roused up naiiense into laughter. He had no egual. And.yeteir tirely hasipy and that this world was com- pletely satisfying his soul, he sits down and Ful,11. AND VILLAGE LOT FOR SALE.—For ' the villa e of Cromarty, containing 100 acres, less two and half acres disposed of for village lots ; 70 - acres el red, well drained and in a good state of cultivati n ; the remaining 30 acres is a fine maple sugar bu h. There are several never -failing springs on the arm. There is a .stuall frame house abd frame b trn, also the village lot in the viliaFre of Cromart . There 13 a gond frame house, and large stable ar shed on it, also a splendid garden. This place wa formerly used as an hotel, and will make an excel' nt businees stand. Thie property will be sold toga her or separately to suit purchaser. Pos- session g ven after harvest. Terms eaey. Apply to P. 0. 1487x13 FARM FOR SALE. --For eale, lot 8, and part lot 9, c ncession 10, Grey township, containing 105 stores all cleared except twenty acres, which is - a good h rdwood bush.. The land is in a high (Orate of cultivat'on, well underdrained and well fenced, without any waste land. There is a good frame house, with summer kitchen and woodFhed ; a large bank barn, 81x52, with storm stabling underniath, and other outbuildings. 'There are four acres of orchard f one of the best varieties of fruit ; three good, nev r -failing wells With pumps in them. ft is a mile an three-quarters from the village of Brus- eels, with good roads leading in all directions. This excellent property will be sold cheap and on easy terms. Ap.,ly on the prem'ses or by letter to box • Tli OR SALE OR TO RENT ON EASY TERMS.— Jr. As the owner wiahes to retire from business on account o ill health, the following valuable property at Winth p, 44 miles north of Seaforth, on loadicg road to 13 ussels, will be sold or rented as one farm or in part to suit purehmer : about 600 a?res of lendid f rming land, with- about 400 under crop, t e balan e in pasture. There are large barns and all other uildings necessary for the implements, vehiole?, to. This land is watered„ has good frame an brick dwelling houses, eta There are ,grigt and aw mills and store which will be sold -or -rented on advantageous terms. Also on 17th con• cession, rey township, 100 acres of land, 40 in pasture, t e balanc.e in timber, Possession given after hart- at of farm lands - mills at once. For par- ticulars al ply to AN DRE W'GOVENLOOK,. Winthrop. Dealet In Lumber and Shingles. . An ki ds of LUMBER - always. on hand and of tl e very hest quality. ' Give n e a call; and see if I can't .give 'you what yo want. . esa-La:- her yard ap.d office .on the Huron E SEAFOR4+1 cal - Instrument E MPO RI UM. ABLISHED, 1873. Owin to hard times we have con- cluded t sell Pianos an'd Organs at Grea ly Reduc'ed Prices; Organs at $25 and upwards, and Piano at Corresponding prices. SE US BiFOBE PURCHASING. SCOTT BROS easleate Write's: "1 never in my life- ;int en a nesv het that it did not rain and rnin it. 1111fAyr vvent out in a shabby; coat boentiso it was raining and thought all who had tile choic.e would. keep indoors that tire sun did not come orat in its strength and bring out with it all the butterflies of fashion whom kaew end who know me. I never con - tainted aecept a, part Ibated out of Isled- noes to airother that I did. not get hissed IN the public and eat byethe writer. I .could not take a drive for a 'few minutes with Teary without being Overturned and having my elbow broken, though my Maud got off unharmed. I could not make a covenant with Arnold, which I thought was to make my fortune without making his instead, than in an incredibly shoat space of time—I think 13 months—I earn- ed for him 20,000 and for myself 1.. I am persuaded that if I wets) to set up aS a baker, every .one in 'my neighborhood would leave off eating bread." The Meaning of the Message. That was the lament of the world's com- edian and joker. All unhappy. The World did everything for Lord - Byron that it could do, and yet ln his last moment ho asked a friend to come and sit down -by him ands read, as most a,ppropriate to his case, the story of "The Bleeding Heart." Torrigiano, the sculptor, executed, after months of. eare and (serving, "Madonna and the Child." The royal family came in and admired it. Everybody that looked at it was in eesta,sy, but ono day, after all that toil and all that admiration, because he did not got as much compensation for • his work as he had expected, he took a mallet and dashed the exquiSite eculpture into atoms. - The world is poor compensa- tion; poor satisfaction poor solaue. Fam- ine, famine in all the' earth; not for '1 years, hiet for 6,0.00. Put, blessed be God,- there is a great corncrib. The Lord. built it. . It is -in an- other land. It is a large place. An angel once measured it, and. as far as I can cal- culate it in one -phrase, that corncrib is 1,600 miles long and' 1,500 miles broad and. 1,500 high, -and it is full. Food for all nations. "Oh," say the people, "WO Will start right away and get • this supply for oUr soul." But stop a mement, foe from the Keeper of that corucrib there comes this word, saying, "You shall not see my face except- your brother be with you." In 'other words, there is no such thing as getting froni heaven- pardon and with us our divine Brother, the Lord Je- sus Christ: Coming Without him we shall fall before we reach the corncrib and our bodies shall be a portion for the Jackals of , the wilderness, but owning with the di- vine 'Jesus, all the granaries of heaven will swing open before our soul and abun- dance shall be given us. We shall be in- vited to sit in. the palace of the King and at the table, and while,the Lord Of . heave is apportioning from his pwn table tb otl er tables, he will _not forget- ins, and the and there it will be found that our Benj min's mess is larger than all the other , for so it ought to he. `` Worthy is the Lan b -that was slain to receive blessing a riches and honor and glory and power." I want to make three points. Eve frank and common sense man will a knowledge himself to be a sinner. Wh t are you going to do with youriins? Ha e them pardoned, you say'. How? Throu the mercy of God. What do you niean y Ithe mercy of God? Is it the letting dow i of a bar for the admission of • all, 3,vithollt respect to character? Be not deceived. I see a sonl coining up to the gate of nieroy a,nd-knocking at the corncrib of heavenly supply, and a voice from:within says, ".Are Yeti alon-ci'' The " sinner replies,: "All i alone." The voice frcan within says, "Y -en I your divine Brother, the I.hrd Jesus, be Oh, that is the point at which so many ' are discomfited. There is no mercy from God except through Jesus Christ. Coming with him- , we are accepted. Coming with- out him, we are rejected. Peter put it right in his great serinon before the high priests when he thundered forth: "Nei- ther is there salvation in y.other. There is no other name given under heaven - among men whereby we ay be saved." Oh, anxious sinner! Oh dying -sinrier 1 Oh, lost sinner! All you 1 aye got td do is to have this divine Benja in along with you. Side by side, comin to the gate, all the sterehouses of lleaven ill swing open before your anxiouS soul. Am I right in calling J ells Benjamin? Oheyes. ' Rachel lived o ly long enough to give a name ta that c iild and with. a dying kiss she called him pen ni. After- ward Jacob changed his name, and he call - ea him Benjamin. The Inca log. of . the name she gave was "Son of my Pain." The meaning of the name the ether gave was, "Son of.my Right Hand." And was not Christ the"Son of Pain?" 11 the sor- row'of Rachel in that hour est n she gave her child over into the bands f strangere was as nothing compared with he struggle of God when he gave op his onl Son. And was not Christ appropriately oalled "Son of the Right Hand?" Did 1 ot Stephen look into heaven and. see him tending at the right hand of God?- And do s not Paul - speak of him as standing at the right hand of God making intercession. -f r us? Oh, Benjamin—Jesus t Son of Pang! Son of Victory! The deepeat emotions Of our souls ought to be stirred at the sound of that nomenclature. In your prayers plead his tears, his sufferings, his sorrows, ana his death. If you refuse to do it, all the corn- cribs and the palaces Of heaven will be -bolted and berred against your soul and a voice from. the' throne shall stun you with the announcement, "You shall not see my face except your brother bo with Real Comfort. MY text also suggests the reagon why so manY people do not get any real comfort. You meet ten people: Nine of theM are in need of some kind of condolence. There is something in their health, or in their State; or in their- domestie condition that de- mands sympathy. • And yet most of the world's sympathy amounts to absolutely nothing. People go to the wrong crib-, or they ; go in tho wrong way. ; When the plague was in Roine a great many years ago, therowere 80 men who chanted them- selves to death with the litanies of Gregory the •Greate-literally chanted themselves to death—and yet it did. not stop the plague. And all the music of tine world cannot halt the plague of the human -heart. 1 co e to some ono whose ailments are chronic and. I say, "In heaven you will nes er bo sick," That does not give you m ch comfort, What you want is a sooth- in power for your present distres. Lost Phi dren, -have you? I come teeyou. and tell yet that. in ten years perhaps you will Go . But th e is but little condolence in that. , Ono da is a year with them and ten years is a small eternity.. ' What you Iva it is spas athy now—present help. I con e to those af you who have lost dear not keep tire departed always in your mii d." Ho can you forget them when eye .y figure the carpet, and. every book, and every pict re and evecrywnrebtoom7oltlIsagnUtit their name? appose 1 "Oh," you saY, "that gives me no help." Suppose I mine to you and say, "God, born all eterniity, hes arranged this trou- good." Then say, -"With the swift feet of peayer go d rect to the corncrib for a, heavenly supply." You go. - You say, "Lord, help n4"; Lord, camfort me." But no help yet, Ne comfort yet. 'Rig all dark. Whet is the matter? I have found. Yen Lord, aro the .w unds of my Soul, and I might to go iftse(f. od and say: "Here, 0 bring with me tiiie wouaded Jesus. Let kis. wounds pay I for nay wounds, his be- reavements for my bereavementeShis lone- liness for'nay loneliaress, his heartbreak for my heartbreak. 0 God, for the sake of the Load Jesus Christ—the God, the Man, the Benjamin, the Brother—dbliver my aztmined soul 0 Jesus of the V:134,13' 4Q04. SEPTEMBER 11, 1896 rMPO ease my fatigue! 0 Jesiis of t e ac ng head, heal my aching head! 0 Jesus of . the Bethany sisters, roll away the storks !--from the door of bur gravel" . I That is the kind of prayer that bring! help, and yet how many of you, are getting no help at all for the reason that there a in your soul perhaps a secret trouble! Y u may aever have mentioned it' to a sing e human ear, or you may have mentioned t to some one who is now gonel away, a d that great sorrow is 4till in your souL A t- er Washington Irving was dead. they fon d a little box that -aontained a braid of hair and a miniature and the name of Matilda Hoffman. and a memorandum Of her death, and a rwnark something like this: "The world after that was a blank' to mo. went -Into the country, but fetand no peace in solitude. I tried to, get intelsociety, but I found no peace in sopiety. There bas been a horror hanging over me by night and by day, and I ain .afraid to be alone." Salve For a Wounded Saul. HOW many unuttered troubles among you! No human ear has ever heard that syoo ow. Oh, troubled -sOul, I want to tell that there .is one salve that can cure tsha wounds of the heart, and- that is the ve made out of the tears of a sympathetic fitis us. tend s -et sorae of you will not take s solace, aud you try chlOral, and you t morphine, and you try strong drink, d you try change of -scene, and you try n v business associations, and anything and everythirtg rather than to take the cliVine companionship and sympathy sug- ea s, "Yon shall not see my face again unl getted by the words of my•text when it le s ydur brother be with you." Oh-, that th s audience today might 'understand. so ething of the height and. depth- find le igth and breadth. and immensity and infinity of God's eternal consolationsl go further and find in ray subject a hi t as to why so many peoplelfail of heav- ell. We aro told that heaven has 12 gates, arid some people infer from thatfact that all the people will go in without refeience toritheir past life, but what is the use of h ving a gate that is not sometimes -to be shint? The swinging of a gate implies that oar entrance into heaven is conditionaL is not a monetary condition. If we come to the door of an exquisite concert, we are not staprized that we must pay a fee, for we that fine earthly music is expen- sive, but all the oratorios of heaven cost nothing. Heaven pays nothing for its mu. - sic. It is all free. There is nothinito bo paid at that door for entrance, blit the con- dition of getting into heaven is our bring- -ing our divine Benjamin along with us. Do you notice how often dying people call upon Jesus? It is the usual prayer offered, —the prayer offered more than all the oth- er prayers put together—"Lord Jesus, re- ceive my spirit." One of our eongrega- tion, when asked in the closing imoments, yes, I know yuu. God bless yen. Good - by. Lord Jesus, receive my spirit." And he was gone. Oh, yes, in the dossing mo - resents of our life we must have a 2hrist to' call upon. If Jacob's sons haA gone up toward Egy,pt, and had gime vitith the very finest equipage and had noViaken Benja- min along witll them, and to the question they should have been obliged to answer: "Sir, we didn't bring him, as father could not let him go. We didn't want Ao be bothered with him " a voice from within would have said: "Go away Item us. You shall not, have any of this supply. "You shall not see my face liecause yiiur brOther is not with you." And if we come up to- ward the door of heaven at last,though come from all luxuriance and brilliancy of surroundings, and knock tor (admittance, and it is found that Christ is not with us, the police of heaven will beat us back from the breadhousei saying: "Depart. I never knew you." Christ or Famine, ' - If Jacob.'s sons, coming tc:ward Egypt, had lost everything on the way; if thev shad expended their last shekel; if they had come up utterly exhausted to the corncribs of Egypt and it bad been found that Ben- jamin was with them, all thn storehouses would have swung open before them. And so, though by fatal casualty we may be ushered into the eternai world, though we zna,y be weak and exhausted by protracted sickness—if in. that last moment we can only just stagger and faint and fall into the gate of heaven—it seems that all the corncaibs of heaven will open for our need and all the palaces will. open for ouniecep- don find the Lord of that place, seated at his iable, end all the angels of God, seated at their table, and tho martyrs seated at their table, and all our glorified kindred, seated at our table, the King shall pass a portion Lro.m_ his table to ours, and then, while we think of. the fact that it was Jesus who started us on the road, and Jesus who kept us on the way, and Jesus who at last gained admittance for our soul, we shall be glad if he has seen of the travail of his soul and been satisfied, and not be at all jealous if it be found that our divine Benjamin's ;mess is five times lar- ger than all the rest. Hail, anointed of the Lord! Thou art worthyl 111'y friends, you see it is either Christ or fam Lee. If there were two ba,nquets spread, and to one of them only yeumight goeyou might stand and think for a good while as to which invitation you had !setter accept; but here it is feasting or starvation. If there were two mansions offered and you might have only one, you might think for a long While, saying, "Perhaps I had bet- ter accept this gift, and perhaps I had bet- ter accept that gift." But here it 'is a choice between palaces of light and hovels of despair. If it were a choice between oratorios, you might say, "I prefer 'The Creation," or, "I prefer 'The Messiah.' -" But hero it is a choice between eternal harmony and everlasting discord. Oh will - you live or die? Will you sail intO the harbor or drive on. the rocks? Will you start for the Egyptian corncrib or Will you perish amid be empty barns of the Ca- naanitish famine? A`, Settled It. • Watts—I saw your friend Abbott thiS morning. Potts—A.bbott? Who told you he was my friend? I haven't a bit of use for him.. Watts—Oh, you haven't? Then Pf course tilinc3rt 41 nate Cod-liver oil suggests consumption, which is al- mo.st unfortunate. Itr; best use is before you yoa begin to get thin, weak, run down ; then is the 77u - dent time to begin to take care is to sup: -1 the system with neede(' and strength. 5rott's of cod-liver o:(1-rwith h) po- phosphites, will bring _back plumpness to those -who have lost it, and make strengt.h where raw cod- liver oil would 1)e a burden. :1-1:1111111 tar r ED5 N$1:::?:*ILE :)WgW: C:As 11)- °°11. SI:ke ants ford, Out. oour Coen ivsme More, Mai 6 6 FiecOrnm ended by Leading Physicians. E EYLON TEA gannot e• equalled as a Nerve Tcinic.. In Lead Paolie s only. From Grocers and Ge-rieral Stoie. Wholesale Agents. dress 4'ADYBRTaz -villa TO It well watered tellent *hence to For partienhus, TV eaunees lig thing, and VI be In luck. Can their clwn homes. Limited, -49 Bich NJ presses for p apple machinery Cattier:le free. the inanufacturtr, GAP1T+L REST, MAIN TINTON BANK* $1,500,000, SEAFORTII BRANCH sr BEET, ANT this and adjoinin eela fogitively passing un their ter huntleg ln al* game, ind will p so treapass. BO 26 ; SAMUEL zoneetsio lot 27, eat the 4th Dated in the Taw A gene al banking bushaess ttansacted. Drafts on all parts of the United State', Great Brita n and. Europe bought and sold. Letters of credit issued, available in an part* of Europe, hina and Japan. Farmers' Sale Notes collected, and advances made onus* SAVINGS DEPARTMENT. Deposi of One Dollar and upwards received, and interest allowed at highest curren rates.1 st added to principal twice each year—at the end of June and December No nobles o withdrawal is required for the whole or any portion of a deposit. HAVE And p consid AL MULLETT & CO., 50 WORTH METAL SHINGLES r Vie 3i ding to do any TOOfilag will be wise to AL SHINGLES before purchasinc, c .-tra, cost and every shingle guaranteed°. #:R MEMBER US Wile in Need of any of the following Goods SOYIHES, ETC. Also a full line of BUILDER'S HARDWARE. is I Hardware, Stoves and Tinware Merchants. ai d Galvanized Iron Work a specialty. WARM 70 BE ice acrea. There good frame barn chard and plenty =for a tem of yea Nies el the house Ltit 20, Stanley, n 300 Pri 1 500 rates 7'00 borro. $1,000 plet 41,500 withi 42,500 EILA: riOWS FOR qij hero, good el en reasonable three newly nal% mouth. Will sell licKinop, or to B.. The nndersi Durham bull, Id s eligible for re Book. Will be sol Eginoadville P- • DIGS FOR SA undersigned ithires,has for -sale shoo kooli for serv --411 payable sit of returning if ne DORIIANCE, Lot forth P.O. BOA FriAXWORTR „IL Owned will , -Cheese Factory, with registered time of service tory. iftIGUI 111 Great THE of Groceries, wholesale pri great bargains VrROCE and Glasswa articles whicl cost. Fruit LUMSDEN & A.SON -ARE STILL SELLING WHEELS Although we de not pretend to supply "any bicycle made" we still have the agency in Seaforth for the old reliables, viz : THE HYSLOP, THE BRANTFORD, THE FLEET, or TI1E CRESCENT And they ar the leaders and sellers' in all parts of the country this yecir. Quality will tell. You c =at go Wrong by purchasing either of them, at, the right price, but be on your guard ; we have heard of unscrupulous dealers in some placee quoting the price a high grade w eels that they were not selling, much below their value, ire, ordee to create the impreser a that, the wheels they were actually agents for, were equally cheap. Ws an old trick nd the public are getting onto it, but still, it catches an unwary customer ccasionally: Avoid disappointment and save money by ordering one of the above high rade wheels from the only authorized agents in Seaforth. CZ ,OOTT'S LOOK, .411 AS 4,3 5 It '5 tins pack 4 cans Mae Broom 8 box MAIN §TRE'VE WILL AY YOU TO EXAMINE ouR FuRNIT INDAPO THIvelaNAT 14114000 raomess 111 RESULTS In 8 Nervous Diseasip Paresireineeple pocket. FrieeS rfittelaitinairan tagiattifigtu SOLD 15-7_1. leading dru W are still adding to our already large stock, and we are no prepared to meet the want. of every one requiring fur - nit re. . It will pay you to exaznine our goods before pur- cha,sing elsewhrre, as we are sure to please you in price, , style and quality. UNDERTAKING Our undertaking department is complete in every respect, and we guarantee satisfaction. S. T. Holmes, Funeral Directior Residence next door to Drs. SCott Az McKay's office. Main Streets Seaforth Porten Old sun Desires to state. the Niftiness -0o James William In the best an roost ireseonab • 8110E—As "Works, °ode 147041